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How voter suppression started and the many forms it takes, and interest in genealogy has increased during the pandemic.
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With winter just around the corner and the pandemic still in effect, metro residents are readying for a season of reading.
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Teaching mindfulness to police, firefighters and EMTs could help decision making and librarians give their book recommendations as we face a coronavirus winter.
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Faced with COVID-19, library branches limited hours and cut in-person events, but they’re still aiming to boost reading over the summer.
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Returned materials will go through their own version of quarantine — 72 hours in a community room — before going back into circulation.
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Segment 1: North Kansas City responds to the coronavirus pandemic.An immediate concern for this Northland municipality is warm weather attracting still…
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Segment 1: Cerner co-founder steps away after forty years with the healthcare records company.One of Kansas City's most succesfull businessmen, Cliff…
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Segment 1: Twenty-five years after the "Great Flood of 1993," is Kansas City any safer?Like most cities in the Missouri River basin, the danger of…
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Segment 1: Matthew Merryman wants to be the next Jackson County executive.A former public defender and political newcomer from Kansas City is challenging…
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The Mid-Continent Public Library system was designed at a time when a gallon of gas cost less than 90 cents, the Beatles disbanded and the Vietnam War…
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Besides being refuges for book lovers and places to surf the Internet and check out music and movies, libraries are increasingly becoming entrepreneurial…
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Segment 1: Meet the Cutlers.The Cutlers aren't your typical Kansas City couple. Not only do they practice law together, but they also host a reality TV…